The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 15, 1960, Image 3

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Tuesday, March 16, 1960
BATTALION
College Station, Texas
Page 3
Church Plans
Weekend Meet
Three members of the faculty
at the Perkins School of Theology
in Dallas will be speakers and
discussion leaders for a three-day
colloquy sponsored by the A&M
Methodist Church on Friday, Sat
urday and Sunday, March 18-20.
Jack Kent, chairman of the Com
mission on Education of the local
church, announced the Rev. Dr.
Fred Gealy, the Rev. Dr. Van
Harvey and the Rev. Dr. Lamar
Cooper will be leaders in this new
approach to the study of the
“Nature and Authority of the
Bible,” and “Christian Insights and
Moral Problems Today” and “The
ology in a Post Christian World.”
Lectures and discussion groups
are being provided for minsters,
laymen and college students. Kent
pointed out a general invitation
is being given to members of all
faiths to attend all sessions of the
study conference. The sessions will
be held at the A&M Methodist
Church in College Station.
“People are searching for deeper
meanings and wider dimensions in
their religious faith,” stated the
Rev. James Argue, pastor of the
church, “and this colloquy offers
an unusual opportunity to those
who are seeking.”
Ministers meet beginning at
2:30 p.m. Friday, March 18, with
the Rev. Dr. Gealy; at 5:30 p.m.
the same day students meet with
the Rev. Dr. Harvey; and at 7:30
p.m. Dr. Cooper leads the laymen
group.
Saturday from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m.
all groups meet together. From 11
to 12 and again from 2 p.m. to
5 p.m. discussion sections will be
held separately for ministers, stu
dents and laymen.
The Rev, Dr. Gealy speaks to
all groups at 7:30 p.m. Saturday
and the Rev. Dr. Harvey will
address all groups at 10 a.m. Sun-!
day morning. The Rev. Dr. Cooper !
will preach the morning sermon at
11 a.m.
Corps Wires
Invitations
Two telegrams of 2,657 words
each, and signed by 1,180 mem
bers of the Corps of Cadets have
been sent to Lt. Gen. Otto P.
Weyland, ’23, and Maj. Gen.
Bernard A. Schriever, ’31, invit
ing them to inaugurational cere
monies for President Earl Rudder
March 26.
Brantley Laycock, Corps Staff
junior, said the telegrams were
part of the plans to invite the
four ranking A&M general offi
cers to the ceremonies.
Lt. Gen. Andrew D. Bruce, ’16,
and Lt. Gen. Robert W. Col-
glazier, ’25, have already accepted
invitations to be present for cere
monies honoring President Rud
der, the second A&M graduate to
become president and first to be
a major general and president
Adenauer To Make
Plea to Ike Today
WASHINGTON MP> — Konrad
Adenauer takes to President Eisen
hower personally today his plea
against concessions on Berlin at
the forthcoming summit confer
ence.
The visiting West German chan
cellor had an extended date at the
White House, lasting from mid
morning through lunch, then ap
pointments with Secretary of State
Christian A. Herter and other
State Department officials in the
afternoon.
Adenauer was reported ready to
advise Eisenhower to avoid the
klNkCOTTM”
(Continued from Page 1)
court will be selected from more
than 150 young ladies representing
colleges and universities, clubs and
other organizations. The selec
tions will be made by authorities
from fashion and art fields.
The Pageant will be held in
Guion Hall at 7:30 p.m. and fol-
towwed by* the Ball in Sbisa Hall.
Allan Marburger of Paige, sen
ior agronomy major and Pageant
publicity chairman, said proceeds
from the event will be used to send
A&M agronomy juniors and sen
iors on an agricultural study tour
of the state.
Faculty sponsors are Dr. H. E.
Hampton and Dr. T. E. McAfee
of the Department of Agronomy.
Cotton and eight members of her
man of the Pageant, said Queen
Berlin issue at the summit and
place priority instead on progress
toward disarmament.
Both Germany-Berlin and dis
armament are on the agenda for
Eisenhower’s mid-May summit
talks in Paris with Soviet Premier
Nikita , Khrushchev and the British
and French chiefs.
Adenauer was > known to feel that
no good can come from a tem
porary deal on West Berlin, the
Red-encircled city from which
Khrushchev wants all Allied troops
withdrawn.
Eisenhower and Herter in turn
were reported prepared to profnise
not to sell out the West Berliners.
But U.S. officials said they also
intended to retain freedom to offer
some concessions if Khrushchev
gives guarantees improving the
Allies’ shaky hold on the city.
Adenauer, on a two-week tour of
the United States, publicly voiced
his suspicions of Moscow’s aims
Monday while receiving an honor
ary doctor’s degree at Princeton
University.
The 84-year-old German leader
declared Soviet claims of good in
tentions cannot be believed as long
as Moscow opposes self-determin
ation for East Germany and East
ern Europe.
“Fifteen years after the war the
same people who demand most
loudly the right of self-determina
tion for every nation in Africa and
Asia refuse it to the German
people,” he said.
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Combat Cutie
Miss Pat Doran, representative of the 4th Battle Group,
opens a gift after being chosen Combat Cutie for 1960 at
the annual Combat Ball Friday evening in Sbisa Dining
Hall. Others in the picture are Miss Sharon Roark, left,
representative of the 1st Battle Group, and Miss Diane
Trahan, right, representative of the 3rd Battle Group.
Advice, Assistance
Electric School
Set March 21-23
The fifth annual Municipal Elec
tric Short School, a technical clinic
designed to provide advice and as
sistance to operators of municipal
electric systems, is set March 21-
23 in the Memorial Student Cen
ter.
John S. Denison, associate pro
fessor in the Department of Elec
trical Engineering, a member of
the program planning committee,
said some of the topics will be of
particular interest to power plant
superintendents, operating super
intendents and other municipal em
ployees.
He said the school is generally
slanted toward small municipal
electric systems.
The program on the first day
starts at 8 a.m. with registration
and the first class at 9:30 a.m.
Speakers and their subjects at
the first session are William A.
Olson of Austin, legal counsel for
the Texas Municipal League, . “Le
gal Rights and Obligations of Mu
nicipal Employees On Private
Property;” James L. Grahl, Wash
ington, D.C., assistant manager,
American Public Power Assn.,.
INAUGURATION
(Continued from Page 1)
give the invocation; special music
will be furnished by the Singing
Cadets, under the direction of Dr.
Bill Turner.
H. B. Zachry of San Antonio,
president of the A&M College
System Board of Directors, will
preside. President Rudder will
give his response following the
talks.
More than 1,000 persons are due
to attend the inaugural dinner to
be held in Sbisa Hall.
“Importance of Power Integration
Among Consumer-Owned Utili
ties;” Ray Swarthout, Dallas, Gen
eral Electric Co., “Turbine Gener
ators in the Municipal Power
Plant.”
On the second day, M. G. Rek-
off, assistant professor in the De
partment of Electrical Engineer
ing, will discuss economics of con
ductor selection. Walter Brock-
house of the S & C Electric Co. at
Kansas City, Mo., will talk on se
lection and application of fuses
to overload distribution lines, and
D. H. Mullen, Westinghouse Elec
tric Corps., Athens, Ga., will dis
cuss distribution transformers.
Speakers and subjects on the
final day are the following:
Miss Mary Frances Boothe, City
Public Service Board, San Antonio,
“A New View of Public Rela
tions;” R. L. Hancock of Austin,
“Federal Power Commission Sys
tems of Equipment Accounts,” and
N. F. Rode, professor in the De
partment of Electrical Engineer
ing, “Capacitors.”
R. W. Abbott of Lubbock, chair
man of the school’s planning com
mittee, will report on the commit
tee’s activities.
The school is sponsored each
year by Department of Electrical
Engineering.
Members of the' planning com
mittee in addition to Abbott and
Denison are J. E. Bates of Robs-
town; T. O. Buchel, Cuero; W. C.
Barnett, Goldthwaite, J. C. Fea-
zelle, Brady; J. M. Francis, New
Braunfels; C. J. Hankamer, Lock
hart; E. D. Jones, Brownsfield; R.
N. McCarver, Sonora; Lewis Nix,
Schulenburg; J. D. Parks, Floy-
dada, and Carlos C. Smith of Gon
zales.
Name Given Geriatrics Center
BULLETIN
The name of the Bryan geria
tric center was changed to
“Crestview” at a special meeting
of the Bryan Chamber of Com
merce Geriatrics Center Project
Committee this morning.
The name Pleasant Acres was
changed because a conflict with a
youth recreation area in College
Station.
The rest of the name, “a com
munity for senior citizens” will
be incorporated in the name after
the change.
“Pleasant Acres, a Community
for Senior Citizens” was the name
selected yesterday by the Geri
atrics Center Project Committee
for a proposed home for the aged
to be located in the Bryan-College
Station area under the auspices of
the Methodist Church of the Texas
Conference.
A special selection committee of
the Bryan Chamber of Commerce
looked over a list of 100 names
submitted over the weekend from
several sources before selecting
the final name, said Lewis New
man, member of the steering com
mittee for the project.
Most Frequent Suggestion
The name “Pleasant Acres” was
suggested by several people, ac
cording to Newman. He said it
was the most frequent entry.
The “Community for Senior
Citizens’" sub-title came from an
other source, Newman said.
“The name ‘Pleasant Acres’ is
the best name we could find for the
home,” said Newman. “It is in
clusive enough for the center to
grow into.
‘On Sizable Tract . . .’
“The center will be located on
a sizable tract of land, and if at
a later date it were expanded to
include other geriatric services,
the name would still fit,” he said.
Col. D. R. Alfonte, chairman for
the selection of the site, announced
120-day options have been picked
up on both 25-acre tracts which
ASCE Wins Award
For Select Display
The student branch of the
American Society of Civil Engi
neers won the top award in engi
neering for their exhibit at the
annual open house held in connec
tion with the High School Career
Day March 5.
The award, a trophy kept for
one year by the winner, was estab
lished several years ago by the
Student Engineers’ Council to
recognize the department in the
School of Engineering that has the
best open house exhibit, J. G. Mc
Guire, assistant to the Dean of
Engineering, says.
Exhibits were judged on the
basis of appearance, organization,
the amount of originality and
initiative, how well displayed and
how well manned by students. The
technical societies in the depart
ments are generally responsible
for the exhibits on Open House
Day, McGuire says.
The exhibit of aeronautical
engineering, architecture and nuc
lear engineering were outstanding.
The trophy will be presented to
the winners later in the semester
by Dean of Engineering J. Fred
Benson.
Men who face wind and weather
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are under consideration as possible
sites for the center.
The sites are located at the
northeast corner of 29th Street
and Villa Maria Road, Bryan, and
the corner of 29th Street and
Briarcrest Road, according to
Newman.
“Pleasant Acres” is to be the
initial geriatrics center for the
Texas Conference of the Methodist
Church. The Texas Conference
comprises 'a triangle with Tex
arkana, Galveston and Orange as
points. As yet, no Methodist old-
age home exists in this area, said
Newman.
Purpose Defined . . .
Henry Clay, president of the
First State Bank and Trust Co.,
Bryan, and chairman of the Geri
atrics Center Project Committee,
defined the purpose of the com
mittee as being “to earn the oppor
tunity i of building a $1 million
geriatrics center, through the ef
forts of the entire community.”
ELECTIONS
(Continued from Page 1)
for Tuesday, March 3.
Academically Classified
Class officer candidates must be
academically classified with their
classes both at this time and at the
beginning of this year. They must
also have a minumum grade point
ratio of 1.
Student Entertainment Manager
candidates must be of junior clas
sification and have a minimum
grade point ratio of 1.25. They
must also have the consent of the
Manager 1 of Recreation and Enter
tainment, Department of Student
Activities and at least one year’s
experience on the Student Enter
tainment Staff. The Manager will
be responsible to the Manager of
Recreation and Entertainment, De
partment of Student Activities.
Yell Leader candidates must be
approved by the YeU Leader Com
mittee, which consists of three col
lege staff members appointed by
the Dean of Students, before filing
for the four positions. The four to
be elected must be classified aca
demically with their respective
classes and have a minimum grade
point ratio of 1.25. The Head Yell
Leader will be appointed by the
Yell Leader Committee.
An initial drive to raise $100,000,
a goa^ set by the committee, has
been scheduled for May 9-23, said
Newman. The initial money will
be used to start work on the
project before the Texas Confer
ence of the Methodist Church
comes in and starts work, said
Newman.
Chart Organization
At a meeting held Feb. 29 at
the Bryan Chamber of Commerce
the main purposes and the struc
tural organization of the commit
tee was explained to all members.
Organization was presented on a
chart with the names of all mem
bers on all sub-divisions listed.
On the head committee, the
steering committee, are Clay, John
Naylor, Col. D. R. Alfonte, New
man, Jack Springer, the Rev. Mr.
Karl Bayer and Alice Brogdon.
Steering Committee
Under the steering committee is
the publicity committee headed by
Joe E. Vincent. Madge Wallace is
in charge of letters and handling
news releases are Bob Stewart,
Troy Dunagon, David Haines, West
Ninemire and Lee Duewall.
Chairman of the speakers com
mittee is H. G. Kenagy. Members
of the committee include Dr. R. L.
Skrabanek and the Rev. Mr. Roy
D. Holt.
Mrs. Travis Bryan is in charge
of volunteer aid.
“The success of this drive will
depend upon our organization,”
said Clay. “The committees are
going to need a lot of help.”
Office Located
The Campaign Office has been
set up in the building located at
25th and Washington Streets, said
Newman. The building'was loaned
to the committee by Henry Moehl-
man of 1416 Beck Street.
Anyone wishing information
about “Pleasant Acres” or desir
ing to make a contribution can
contact the campaign office or Dr.
Karl Bayer, district superintendent
of the Methodist Church, at
TA 2-1321.
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